MR IMAGING OF NEURONAL MIGRATIONAL DISORDERS

  • 1 November 1988
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 9 (6), 1101-1106
Abstract
Neuronal migrational disorders of the brain represent abnormalities in the formation of the neocortex caused by faulty migration of the subependymal neuroblasts. These migrational anomalies include lissencephaly (agyria/pachygyria), pachygyria, schizencephaly, heterotopias, hemimegalencephaly, and polymicrogyria. We used MR imaging (performed on a 0.5-T or 1.5-T scanner) to evaluate 21 patients who had neuronal migratory anomalies. Four patients had lissencephaly, seven had pachygyria, including one patient with hemimegalencephaly, seven had schizencephaly, and three had heterotopias. All MR scans included T1-weighted spin-echo sequences, and seven also had inversion-recovery sequences. The cortical surface, cortex, and gray-white matter interface were wel evaluated with both sequences; however, the inversion-recovery images were superior. All but two patients were imaged in both the axial and coronal planes: both projections demonstrated well the migrational abnormalities. MR is an excellent method for diagnosing the migrational anomalies of lissencephaly, pachygyria, schizencephaly, heterotopias, and hemimegalencephaly; it appears to be the imaging method of choice for evaluating these disorders.